The Sunday Telegraph

Ghouls just wanna have fun

Hallowe’en in 2018 can be a PC minefield. Michael Hogan reports on how to avoid the pitfalls

- drunke Hall

Maybe it’s the fault of those pesky Americans, the influence of social media and sheer commercial greed – but with each passing year, Hallowe’en looms ever larger in the social calendar.

Yet in an era where MeToo and online outrage abound,

Oct 31 is becoming an ethical minefield. It can be a pumpkinspi­ced nightmare to navigate, but help is at hand. Here’s how to have a Happy Hallowe’en, 2018-style …

The costumes

Gone are the days when fancy dress was a free-for-all. All manner of previously innocuous costumes can nowadays be deemed “problemati­c”.

Geisha garb, Disney’s Moana attire or Day of the Dead skull make-up are cultural appropriat­ion – unless you happen to be Japanese, Polynesian or Mexican. “It’s a culture, not a costume!” screech the bed-wetting killjoys. Oops, I mean, entirely reasonable people.

Cross-dressing can be deemed “transphobi­c” and, aptly, makes some people very cross. By extension, vampire costumes are Transylvan­ia-phobic and fake blood is transfusio­n-phobic.

Hannibal Lecter-style restraints, masks or straitjack­ets j apparently reinforce harmful rmful misconcept­ions about mental illness. Not to mention flesh-eating serial killers, who are often jolly nice chaps.

Some revellers believe that putting “sexy” before anything remotely spooky – sexy black cat, sexy spider, sexy zombie – qualifies as a legitimate costume. Us more reconstruc­ted types should resist such raunchines­s for fear of letting down the #sisterhood and playing into the hands of the #patriarchy.

So, in this age of wokeness, what can you actually wear? If you want to tap into the “frightgeis­t,” Donald Trump (orange face, Shredded Wheat hair, Make America Great Again cap), Melania Trump (pith helmet, crisp white shirt, robo-face), Stormy Daniels, Vladimir Putin, Elon Musk, Kim Jong-un, the Novichok two (with Salisbury guidebook and cathedral brochure) or Piers Morgan (ideally with eye-rolling Susanna Reid as companion) are socially acceptable, although they might not exactly make you popular.

Fashion-forward feminist assassin Villanelle from Killing Eve or Offred from The Handmaid’s Tale might be more “empowering” choices.

However, Brett Kavanaugh, Harvey Weinstein, Bill Cosby, Cristiano Ronaldo, and “Sir” Philip Green should be filed under “too soon”. Killer Saudis wielding bone saws or Brexitthem­ed costumes risk causing drunken “debate” – save it for

Hallowe’en 2019, please.

The T decoration­s

Pumpkins P for carving must be sustainabl­y farmed a and preferably hand-picked ha by wellyclad cla infants, then posted on Instagram I with a string of insufferab­ly self- satisfied hashtags. The nation’s food waste crisis – not to mention the terrifying fact that 18,000 tons of pumpkin ends up in landfill postHallow­e’en – means a new focus on repurposin­g the flesh and seeds. Yes, you will be sick of pumpkin-flavoured everything by early November, but any nausea will be offset by your sense of eco-superiorit­y. Turnips and swedes were once the trickyto-carve tradition, so if you have any in your overpriced organic veg box, give them a go. A full risk assessment should be undertaken before any candles are placed inside.

The games

Apple-bobbing is a health and safety nightmare – it’s basically legalised waterboard­ing – although, on the upside, it can be counted towards one of your five a day.

“Penny for the Guy” pays homage to Mr Fawkes but could still be seen as sexist. “Penny for the guy slash girl slash self-identifyin­g non-binary gender-fluid individual” is a safer bet.

“Pin the wart on the witch’s nose” should be avoided in case it causes offence to those with dermatolog­ical conditions, or trivialise­s the persecutio­n of actual witches.

The tricks

Door-knocking strangers is an activity fraught with risk, especially if they decline to dispense treats and you’re forced to prank them.

To avoid legal proceeding­s, carry paperwork and ask prospectiv­e victims: “Please sign this waiver before I spook you.” Can’t be too careful.

The treats

Haribo and fun-size chocolate bars are contributi­ng to the obesity crisis, so far better to offer up sugar-free, gluten-free, pleasure-free treats. The little darlings’ faces might contort in disgust, but they’ll thank you for it one day. When they get out of therapy.

It’s safest to ensure all comestible­s are vegan, even if it makes them taste like a Pilates instructor’s Birkenstoc­k. Make certain that ingredient­s are clearly marked in case of allergies, intoleranc­es or made-up aversions. Nothing with dairy or nuts, obviously. Or fun. God forbid. So old-fashioned.

Happy Hallowe’en! Here’s hoping you won’t become the centre of a viral shaming campaign by the end of it.

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 ??  ?? Spooky: make sure your pumpkins are organic. Below, Villanelle from Killing Eve. Inset, a grisly sweet for trick-or-treaters
Spooky: make sure your pumpkins are organic. Below, Villanelle from Killing Eve. Inset, a grisly sweet for trick-or-treaters

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